Overcome Personal Adversity

Monday, April 21, 2014

The telecommunications industry doesn’t have a specific
day in which it was founded, but it nonetheless has a long and rich history
that has led us to where we are today with ubiquitous internet and fast mobile
connections. All of it is a culmination of standards, protocols, and science,
each of them working together in harmony to form the highly connected
technology that we take for granted today. The beginnings of all of this were
quite humble, starting with nothing more than a system where you could send Morse
code through miles and miles of wire.

The Early Days

The idea of using electricity for communication came
about very early on, around the year 1753. At the time the idea was deemed too
impractical to implement, putting it on the backburner for many decades to
come.

Further experiments wouldn’t be performed until the
1800’s, with the first electrostatic telegraph being invented by Francis
Ronalds. It used individual wires for each letter of the alphabet, and was
initially set up in his garden, able to transmit signals over eight miles. The
use of Morse code through telegraph lines wouldn’t come until much later,
around the year 1837.

Analog to Digital

Fast forward a number of years, and you’ll hear the familiar
name of Alexander Graham Bell, the person who patented the telephone in 1876.
Bell and Gardiner Greene Hubbard would later go on to found the Bell Telephone
Company, which would later become the American Telephone & Telegraph, or
AT&T. At the time, AT&T was the largest telecommunications company in
existence.

From there, telecommunications really started to take
off, especially when inventions like radio, television, and satellites came
into play. In a relatively short period of time in history, we had invented the
ability to transmit moving pictures and audio to a very wide area, and relay
that signal across the world.

Perhaps the biggest and most significant invention was
the Internet, which continues to change and revolutionize the way we
communicate, work, and live our lives.

Mobile Technology

Today, besides the Internet, cell phones have dominated
the telecommunications industry, accelerated by the invention of the iPhone in
2007, considered by many to be the start of the modern smartphone. Since then,
the entire telephone industry was changed, and today the vast majority of young
people are favoring mobile phones over traditional landlines. Increasingly,
we’re communicating with each other without the use of wires—only
electromagnetic waves invisible to our human eyes.

What’s in Store

As always, it’s difficult to predict the future if you
want to be absolutely accurate about it. However, it doesn’t take a visionary
to see that mobile devices and pervasive Internet connectivity are dramatically
changing our lives. Currently it is the hope of current governments that even
people in the most rural areas should have access to reasonably fast Internet.
And increasingly, this is becoming more of a necessity as things like job
applications start to move entirely online.

Eventually, it wouldn’t be that strange to see pervasive
connectivity take over our lives to the point where it comes the norm—where we
don’t even notice that we’re using this technology because it has become so
seamless and transparent.

Prepaid phone cards have been around for quite some time,
and have always been used as a way to make long-distance or international calls
at very low rates. Their main use comes from when a customer has no desire to
pay every month for calls that they make only every so often. These prepaid
phone cards will often let one call globally at rates that are much more
affordable than standard monthly plans that include international calling.

Essentially, they were very important in filling that
niche where you might have relatives, friends, and/or pen pals that live far
across the U.S., or even overseas in a completely different country.

Pay Less

As mentioned, prepaid phone cards will very often offer
rates that are significantly lower than what you would pay extra for a monthly
calling plan. These rates can go as low as 0.8 cents a minute. That’s a
fraction of one cent. More typically, these rates will hover around 1 or 2
cents per minute.

With a regular monthly plan, you would be paying as much
as $10 extra on top of the rest of your phone bill. For some people this extra
cost isn’t that big of a deal, but for those who like to be efficient with
their money and don’t like to pay for what they don’t use, prepaid phone cards
are the way to go.

Convenience

A really nice thing about prepaid phone cards is that
they are incredibly convenient to find and use. You can most likely find them
in nearly any retail store, especially ones that carry electronics. You can
also usually purchase the equivalent service online, where it goes straight to
your phone account.

Usually, prepaid phone cards will be listed for a
specific carrier, such as AT&T, Skype, Verizon, T-Mobile, and so on. Just
be sure to buy the one that matches your carrier.

Versatility

Since prepaid phone cards only offer a specific amount of
minutes to a certain country (or to a number of different countries), you have
the ability to only pay for what you use. This adds an element of versatility
that isn’t offered in regular monthly plans.

This is also another reason that prepaid phone cards are
important; they give the consumer a choice. Many people don’t even know that
they have the option of using prepaid phone cards, and end up paying extra
every month.

Other Thoughts

If a little extra every month isn’t much of a concern for
you, then prepaid phone cards may not be of much use. But if you care a great
deal about saving money, they’re absolutely fantastic for that purpose.

You only need to look out for cards that have misleading
advertising on them. Make sure that you don’t run into any hidden fees by
reading and understanding the fine print; sometimes it isn’t enough just to
read the low rate in big, bold lettering. In any case, phone cards from
reputable and major carriers tend to be the most trustworthy, so as long as you
stay with those, you should be fine.